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3D aircraft parts can now be built or repaired to order as a result of cutting-edge technology developed by engineering researchers at RMIT University, RUAG Australia and the Innovative Manufacturing Cooperative Research Centre (IMCRC). Moreover, the 3D-built or repaired steel and titanium parts...

Budding biomedical engineers will work on innovative technologies to personalise orthopaedic implants to suit individual recipients while collaborating with industry on real-world challenges.
The Australian Research Council (ARC) has launched a new industrial transformation training centre at The...

It’s not every day you find the words ‘engineering’ and ‘theatre improvisation’ in the same sentence, but one US professor is using the art form to help engineering students fine-tune their focus and turn obstacles into opportunities.

The NSW city of Newcastle has more than 100 years of history associated with engineering and, according to the NSW Department of Planning and the Environment, engineers in the region have a great future to look forward to.

Imagine a ‘smart’ bandage that could heal chronic wounds from conditions like diabetes and complex injuries such as those sustained in combat, with the potential for different areas of biomedical engineering.

Our face is our most basic form of identity, psychologically and physically, and its recognition is set to be the focus of future technology that will define us as individuals, just like the discovery of the fingerprint in the mid-19th century.

Imagine never losing your glasses ever again. For some people that’s a very big deal and it was something electrical and electronics engineer, Allen Liao, experienced first-hand that ultimately impacted on his life in a way he couldn’t have envisaged.